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Psychology

D-Index
72
Citations
51050
World Ranking
2008
National Ranking
1167

Research.com Recognitions

  • 1979 - Rema Lapouse Award, American Public Health Association
  • 1977 - Member of the National Academy of Medicine (NAM)

Overview

Lee N. Robins was affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis in the United States. Their career was marked by membership in prestigious organizations and recognition within the field of public health and medicine.

They received the Rema Lapouse Award from the American Public Health Association in 1979. Additionally, they were elected as a member of the National Academy of Medicine (NAM) in 1977.

Lee N. Robins was deceased.

Best Publications

  • National Institute of Mental Health diagnostic interview schedule: Its history, characteristics, and validity.

    Lee N. Robins;John E. Helzer;Jack L. Croughan;Kathryn S. Ratcliff

  • Deviant Children Grown Up: A Sociological and Psychiatric Study of Sociopathic Personality.

    Bruce P. Dohrenwend;Lee N. Robins

  • Lifetime Prevalence of Specific Psychiatric Disorders in Three Sites

    Lee N. Robins;John E. Helzer;Myrna M. Weissman;Helen Orvaschel

  • The Composite International Diagnostic Interview: An Epidemiologic Instrument Suitable for Use in Conjunction With Different Diagnostic Systems and in Different Cultures

    Lee N. Robins;John Wing;Hans Ulrich Wittchen;John E. Helzer

  • Psychiatric Disorders in America: The Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study

    Darrel A. Regier;Lee Robins

  • One-month prevalence of mental disorders in the United States. Based on five Epidemiologic Catchment Area sites.

    Darrel A. Regier;Jeffrey H. Boyd;Jack D. Burke;Donald S. Rae

  • Deviant Children Grown Up.

    Howard E. Freeman;Lee N. Robins

  • The NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program: Historical Context, Major Objectives, and Study Population Characteristics

    Darrel A. Regier;Jerome K. Myers;Morton Kramer;Lee N. Robins

  • Sturdy childhood predictors of adult antisocial behaviour: replications from longitudinal studies.

    Lee N. Robins

  • Post-traumatic stress disorder in the general population. Findings of the epidemiologic catchment area survey.

    John E. Helzer;Lee N. Robins;Larry McEvoy

  • Revised Prevalence Estimates of Mental Disorders in the United States: Using a Clinical Significance Criterion to Reconcile 2 Surveys' Estimates

    William E. Narrow;Donald S. Rae;Lee N. Robins;Darrel A. Regier

  • Cross-cultural feasibility, reliability and sources of variance of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI)

    Hans-Ulrich Wittchen;Lee N. Robins;Linda B. Cottler;Norman Sartorius

  • A Comparison of Clinical and Diagnostic Interview Schedule Diagnoses: Physician Reexamination of Lay-Interviewed Cases in the General Population

    John E. Helzer;Lee N. Robins;Larry T. McEvoy;Edward L. Spitznagel

  • Age of onset of drug use as a factor in drug and other disorders.

    L N Robins;T R Przybeck

  • Adult disorders predicted by childhood conduct problems: results from the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area project.

    Lee N. Robins;Rumi K. Price

  • One-month prevalence of mental disorders in the United States and sociodemographic characteristics : the Epidemiologic Catchment Area study

    Darrel A. Regier;M. E. Farmer;D. S. Rae;J. K. Myers

  • Validity of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule, Version II: DSM-III diagnoses

    Lee N. Robins;John E. Helzer;Kathryn S. Ratcliff;Warren Seyfried

  • HOW EARLY CAN WE TELL?: PREDICTORS OF CHILDHOOD CONDUCT DISORDER AND ADOLESCENT DELINQUENCY *

    Jennifer L. White;Terrie E. Moffitt;Felton Earls;Lee Robins

  • Treatment-seeking for depression by black and white Americans

    Linda K. Sussman;Lee N. Robins;Felton Earls

  • THE COMPOSITE INTERNATIONAL DIAGNOSTIC INTERVIEW (CIDI)

    Lee N. Robins

  • Acorns and Oaks, Sowing and Reaping, ... and Cabbages and Kings@@@Straight and Devious Pathways from Childhood to Adulthood.

    Howard B. Kaplan;Lee N. Robins;Michael Rutter

Frequent Co-Authors

Linda B. Cottler
Linda B. Cottler University of Florida
Kathleen K. Bucholz
Kathleen K. Bucholz Washington University in St. Louis
Myrna M. Weissman
Myrna M. Weissman Columbia University
Linda K. George
Linda K. George Duke University
Marjorie H. Klein
Marjorie H. Klein University of Wisconsin–Madison
Helena C. Kraemer
Helena C. Kraemer Stanford University
Kathleen R. Merikangas
Kathleen R. Merikangas National Institutes of Health
Terrie E. Moffitt
Terrie E. Moffitt Duke University
John P. Rice
John P. Rice Washington University in St. Louis

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Best Scientists Citing Lee N. Robins